
โBeen a long time coming, but itโs what the people have been calling forโ said Lisa McNab, MANA President about the agreement that will see MANA and the Maori Party carry a strong mandate to win all seven Maori seats.
โStanding against one another only lets the party that stole our foreshore and seabed, steal our seats as well. We have to be better than that. Those seats belong to the Maori people, not to anyone elseโ
โTuku came north last year to talk about how we might work together to bring those seats back to the Maori world, and ever since thereโs been a real buzz in the Maori electoratesโ said McNab โFrom the race at Karapiro where MANA MAORI beat Labour easily to the delight of the crowd, to our going on to Ratana together, our taking a common stand at Waitangi, and out on the streets and in the maraes – the support has been awesomeโ
โTodayโs arrangement formalises all of that.
โIt allows MANA to focus on Te Tai Tokerau at the 2017 General Election, a decision weโd actually made at our AGM last year.
โAnd it adds weight to the Maori Partyโs decision to stand candidates in the other 6 Maori seats (Tamaki Makaurau, Hauraki-Waikato, Waiariki, Ikaroa-Rawhiti, Te Tai Hauauru, Te Tai Tonga), and we wish them all the best in their endeavours.
โBoth parties have agreed to not stand candidates against one another.
โAnd both parties will be free to develop the policies they think best; to campaign for the party vote; and to criticise one anotherโs policies without attacking each otherโs candidates.
โWeโve got a big job ahead of usโ said McNab โThings are even tougher now for our people than they were when Hone left, so we take nothing for granted.
โLast nightโs Colmar-Brunton poll showing MANA registering in the ratings even though weโre not even in parliament yet was a pleasant surprise and public confirmation that MANA is back in the game.โ
โThat poll, coupled with the enthusiasm of the people and Honeโs track record, means weโre feeling really positive about 2017โ

